People v. Neira (Danny)
This text of People v. Neira (Danny) (People v. Neira (Danny)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
against
Danny Neira, Appellant.
Appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Nassau County, First District (Sondra K. Pardes, J.), rendered December 18, 2012. The judgment convicted defendant, upon a jury verdict, of failing to provide proper sustenance to an animal.
ORDERED that the judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Defendant and his wife, Rose Neira, were charged, in separate informations, with, among other things, failing to provide proper sustenance to an animal (Agriculture and Markets Law § 353) (see People v Neira, ___ Misc 3d ___, 2016 NY Slip Op _____ [appeal No. 2013-87 N CR], decided herewith). The animal was a two-year-old male Great Dane dog, kept in a home located in Farmingdale, Nassau County. The court consolidated the informations charging defendant and his wife, and directed a consolidated trial. In addition, after the People disclosed that the body of the dog had inadvertently been destroyed, the court imposed a sanction of not permitting the report of the necropsy of the dog to be admitted in evidence, and no reference to the report could be made on the People's direct case. The court permitted the prosecutor to elicit evidence of uncharged crimes with respect to the living conditions of other animals in the home.
At the jury trial, the People presented testimony that, on November 22, 2010, based on an anonymous allegation of animal abuse, detectives from the Nassau County District Attorney's office conducted an investigation at a home located on Fallwood Parkway in Farmingdale, regarding the dog. They discovered that the dog was emaciated, had uncut claws, and that its ears were extremely dirty and unkempt. A leash or rope in the kitchen of the home to which the dog was tied was too short for the dog to reach a food bowl. The dog was brought to an animal hospital, where it was examined by a veterinarian. He determined that the dog weighed only 87.4 pounds. The dog should have weighed between 120 and 150 pounds. The dog's condition was consistent with malnutrition and a lack of medical care. The veterinarian testified that the dog's condition was so poor that he could not handle special nutrition-rich dog food. The dog's problems with his claws made it difficult for him to walk. The court did not permit the jury to learn that the dog had subsequently died.
The People adduced documentary evidence that defendant was an owner of the Farmingdale home, and that his driving record and automobile registration indicated that he lived in Farmingdale. The investigators, who visited the home on November 22, 2010, testified that defendant was present, although he did not speak to them. The evidence also established that, [*2]when Rose Neira was arrested on December 1, 2010, she called defendant to come home and take care of the children.
During defendant's case, the court permitted a witness to testify that she would take her son to visit defendant, whom she claimed was the boy's father, on weekends or alternate weekends at an apartment in the Bronx, that defendant stayed at that apartment, and that he did not live in Farmingdale in 2010. That witness also testified that defendant currently resided in the Farmingdale home, and that she lived in a separate apartment adjacent to the Farmingdale home.
Following the trial, the jury convicted defendant of failing to provide proper sustenance to an animal (Agriculture and Markets Law § 353).
On appeal, defendant argues that, as a result of the destruction of the dog's body after the necropsy had been performed, he could not conduct an independent necropsy and he was prevented from presenting a defense based on scientific evidence that the dog had suffered from a systemic disease. Thus, dismissal was the only appropriate remedy. Defendant also argues that the District Court erred in consolidating the informations and directing a consolidated trial, which violated Bruton v United States (391 US 123 [1968]). Defendant further argues that the District Court erred in permitting the prosecutor to elicit evidence of uncharged crimes with respect to the living conditions of other animals in the home. Next, defendant contends that the court improperly limited the testimony of a defense witness by sustaining objections to questions regarding whether defendant resided in an apartment in the Bronx in 2010. Finally, defendant contends that the verdict of guilt was against the weight of the evidence, as the People failed to establish that defendant had anything to do with the dog.
The People respond that the sanction of preclusion of the necropsy report was sufficient, and not an abuse of the court's discretion as the dismissal of a criminal charge is a drastic remedy that is rarely imposed. The People assert that the court correctly consolidated the informations and directed a consolidated trial. The People contend that the District Court correctly permitted evidence regarding the living conditions of other animals in the home. The People further contend that defendant's claim regarding the limitation of the testimony of a defense witness is unpreserved for appellate review. In any event, the testimony constituted hearsay, because it was based on whether defendant had told the witness that he lived in an apartment in the Bronx. The People conclude by asserting that, the evidence connected defendant with the home in Farmingdale and clearly established that the dog had not been fed.
CPL 200.40 (1), which applies to informations (see CPL 100.45), permits the joinder of criminal counts against two or more defendants, where (a) all of the defendants are jointly charged with every offense alleged in the information, or (b) all of the offenses charged are based on a common scheme or plan, or (c) all of the offenses charged are based upon the same criminal transaction as that term is defined in CPL 40.10 (2), or (d) under certain circumstances where the information includes a count of enterprise corruption (see People v Chestnut, 19 NY3d 606, 610 [2012]). CPL 200.40 (2) permits a court to order consolidation of informations and to direct a consolidated trial "if the offenses could have been charged in a single information pursuant to CPL 200.40 (1)." Where "the proof against two or more defendants is supplied by the same evidence, only the most cogent reasons warrant separate trials" (People v Thomas, 197 AD2d 719, 719 [1993]; see People v Mahboubian, 74 NY2d 174, 183 [1989]; People v Islam, 22 AD3d 599, 600 [2005]; People v Philip, 205 AD2d 714 [1994]). Here, the evidence against both defendants was the same, and the offense charged was based on the same criminal transaction.
Defendant's Bruton claim is without merit. Rose Neira had allegedly told a police lieutenant, who had observed the other animals in the home, that she and defendant had cared for those animals for years. However, it is undisputed that the People never sought to have that statement admitted into evidence, although they reserved the right to cross-examine defendant if he chose to testify. Thus, any claim that defendant and Rose Neira raised antagonistic defenses is without merit under the circumstances of the case. Furthermore, defendant does not argue that he did not testify because of the possibility of being cross-examined with respect to the statement. [*3]Cross-examination, by itself, is not a cogent reason for directing separate trials.
We find that defendant was prejudiced by the fact that the body of the dog was destroyed.
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People v. Neira (Danny), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-neira-danny-nyappterm-2017.